English word name from Latin 'famosus,' used as a given name conveying renown and distinction.
Famous is one of those audacious given names that doubles as a declaration. Its roots reach back to the Latin "fama" — meaning rumor, reputation, or renown — through the Old French "fameus" and into English, where the adjective has meant celebrated or widely known since at least the fourteenth century. To bestow it as a name is an act of aspiration, a parental blessing encoded linguistically: this child will be known.
The name appears with some frequency in African American naming traditions, where inventive, aspirational, and virtue-adjacent names have long carried social and spiritual weight. Names like Precious, Legend, and Famous reflect a tradition of naming children toward greatness rather than merely after ancestors. This practice has roots in West African naming customs where a name is understood as a statement of destiny, not merely a label.
In that context, Famous is less boastful than it might first appear — it is a prayer made phonetic. In contemporary culture, Famous gained renewed visibility through Kanye West's 2016 track "Famous" and the cultural conversation it ignited about celebrity, legacy, and memory. As a given name it remains rare enough to be genuinely distinctive, carrying an inherent conversational charge. Children named Famous inhabit their name like an invitation — the expectation built in from the first day is that the world will eventually know who they are.